New Asian-African strategic partnership signed

Share:

April 24, 2005 14:34 IST

Asian and African leaders on Sunday signed a new strategic partnership to ensure peace, stability and security in the two continents by boosting trade and stepping up cooperation in war against terrorism and transnational organised crimes.

Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and South African leader Thabo Mbeki inked the four-page declaration on the New Asian-African Partnership in Indonesia's Bandung, the historic town where the countries from the two continents got together for the first time in 1955 and subsequently created the Non-Aligned Movement.

The leaders from over 100 Asian and African countries, including Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, adopted the declaration at the two-day summit in Jakarta, which ended on Saturday.

Through the strategic partnership 'we will pool together the vast resources and the tremendous creative energies of Asia and Africa to solve some of the most persistent problems of development', Yudhoyono told the signing ceremony.

The leaders also took a symbolic walk to commemorate the Golden Jubilee of the 1955 Bandung Asia-Africa conference.

In the declaration, the leaders said, "We are determined to prevent conflict and resolve disputes by peaceful means and endeavour to explore innovative mechanisms for confidence-building and dispute resolution as well as for post-conflict peace building.

"The strategic partnership provides a momentum in achieving peace, prosperity and progress," the declaration said.

The partnership will be based on nine principles and ideals, which include collective and united efforts in multilateral fora, protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms, promotion of a just, democratic, transparent, accountable and harmonious society and commitment to open dialogue based on mutual respect and benefit.

A summit of heads of state and government will be held every four years, a meeting of foreign ministers every two years and sectoral ministerial and other technical meetings when deemed as necessary to develop and institutionalise the process of NAASP.

A business summit in conjunction with the summit of the top leaders will also be held every four years.

The NAASP shall emphasise the need to promote practical cooperation between the two continents in trade, industry, investment, finance, tourism, information and communication technology, energy, health, transportation, agriculture, water resources and fisheries, according to the declaration.

"We envision an Asian-African region at peace with itself and with the world at large, working together as a concert of nations in harmony, non-exclusive, bonded in dynamic partnership and conscious of our historical ties and cultural heritage.

"We visualise an affluent Asian-African region characterised by equitable growth, sustainable development as well as a common determination to enhance the quality of life and well-being of our people," the leaders from the two continents resolved.

They decided to conduct NAASP through three tiers of interaction -- an inter-governmental forum, sub-regional organisations and people-to-people interaction, particularly those involving business, academia and civil society.

 

Get Rediff News in your Inbox:
Share: